Letter from a reservist

Thousands of letters stream into my mailbox each month. Here is
one of the gems of the year, reprinted with permission from Lynn Nicolai.
God bless all our men and women in uniform, active-duty and (END
ITAL) reserve:
I am an active drilling Navy Reserve Nurse Corps Officer, a CDR
(commander), attached to a Naval Hospital Unit. I just transferred from a
Marine Reserve Squadron, where I was a member of the medical team. Serving
with and for the Marines has been the best duty I've had in my 23-year
career (part active and part reserve).
My Marines are the most devoted and dedicated souls I have ever
known. There are no truer words than "Semper Fi" and "We leave no man
behind."
The people of this country should know the level of loyalty and
compassion and skill of the medical team members that go with their
treasured sons, daughters, fathers and mothers into the battle zone -- or
right onto the battle field (as the corpsmen and chaplains do). And they
should be glad that we do it, that we are willing to do it, that we want to
do it. And, obviously, it isn't just the Marines and Sailors. I have friends
in the Army, Air Force and Air National Guard, all of whom share the same
loyalty and desire.
You would probably be surprised at the number of people who are
astonished when I tell them what I do. I am a single mom. I have a
13-year-old son. I work in my civilian job as a pediatric office nurse
manager. I am very busy in my civilian life. I do my reserve work one
weekend a month and 2 weeks (sometimes more) during the summer.
When I tell people what I do, the response is usually, "Well
aren't you afraid to get called up?" Or: "You wouldn't want to go, would
you?" I am always torn in my response. Yes, I'm afraid, but yes, I would
want to go with my troops. We are all split, my military friends and I,
between devotion to family and devotion to duty.
Duty usually wins. Where my fellow Sailors and Marines go, I
want to go, too. I could leave my son safely in the care of grandparents or
his father, and not worry about him. I would miss him terribly, but my worry
would be whether I would safely return and when I would return. However, if
called up, I'd go in a New York minute. That's where my heart is. That's
where the hearts of my unit are. There is a bond among military people, a
cohesiveness that cannot be explained. You have to experience it to get the
true meaning, the real depth, of the friendships formed and the loyalties
created by that bond.
I served in Desert Storm in '91 with a Fleet Hospital group sent
to the desert outside the port of Al Jubail, Saudi Arabia. We were a battle
zone tent hospital, 80 miles back from the borders of Kuwait. It was a
500-bed tent hospital, 1,200 reservists in all, running every phase of what
it takes to run a large hospital like that. It was the most amazing thing I
have ever seen and the best experience of my life.
After the September 11th attacks, I can't tell you the number of
my friends, including myself, that picked up phones to Washington, D.C.,
calling detailers, calling the Nurse Corps main offices, volunteering to go
anywhere they needed nurses to go: to the hospital ships, the port of NYC,
and later, to Afghanistan and beyond.
"Take me," they said. "If we're needed, we'll go."
We are required, as reservists, to always have things in order,
financially and otherwise, to be able to leave on very short notice. It
keeps a person organized, and very aware of how precious time with loved
ones is. You never know when that will end. And that's true of life in
general, anyway.
For those who have had to defend it, liberty has a flavor the
protected will never know.

Misc.

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